Gustave Doré’s paintings: After the war
With the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, Gustave Doré volunteered to serve in the National Guard. When he was trapped in the siege of Paris, he seized the opportunity to paint his friend the actress Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923), in what was probably the first portrait in her long and glittering career.

She was only twenty-six at the time, and was just starting a string of successful performances in the city’s Odéon theatre. During the siege she took charge of converting the theatre into a hospital that cared for more than 150 patients. When it re-opened as a theatre the following year, Bernhardt took the lead for a highly successful run. On its opening night, Victor Hugo, author of the play, knelt and kissed her hand.
Doré also produced a series of moving sketches showing the destruction and suffering in Paris at the time of its siege in the autumn of that year.

Among those is his Sister of Charity Saving a Child. An Episode of the Siege of Paris (1870-71).

The following year he committed some of his apocalyptic visions of the siege to canvas, in The Enigma (souvenirs de 1870), and two other major paintings. All three were made using grisaille, greys normally used to model tones in traditional layered technique.
This shows the shattered and still-burning remains of the city in the background, bodies of some of the Prussian artillery in the foreground, and two mythical beasts silhouetted in an embrace. The winged creature is female, and probably represents France, who clasps the head of a sphinx, who personifies the forces that determine victory or defeat. The enigmatic question would then relate to the Franco-Prussian War, and the reasons for France’s defeat.

When Doré visited London he was shocked by its large population of vagrants and homeless. This print of A Couple and Two Children Sleeping on a London Bridge (1871) is one of several records he made at the time, from which a selection was included in his illustrated book on London published the following year.

Doré continued to paint religious narrative works, in particular several versions of Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem. This, a preparatory sketch for his final huge version exhibited at the Salon in 1876, shows his brushwork at its loosest and most gestural. This shows the conventional Christian account in the Gospels, of Christ entering Jerusalem in triumph on the back of a donkey, as the start (‘Palm Sunday’ because of the palm fronds usually involved) of the series of processes leading to his Crucifixion. A popular biblical narrative in European painting, few finished works can match Doré’s at 6 by 10 metres (20 by 33 feet).

In 1873 he visited the Scottish Highlands to fish for salmon, and fell in love with the country. Two of his best paintings of the Highlands are Scottish Highlands (1875) above, and Landscape in Scotland (c 1878) below. These were painted in his studio from the sketches and studies he had made during his tour.

Doré also had good business reasons for being in Britain: in 1867, he held a major exhibition of his work in London, leading to the opening of his Doré Gallery in Bond Street, London. He additionally completed a five year contract with a publisher that required him to stay in London for three months each year.

At the time of his death in 1883, Doré was close to completing another huge painting showing The Vale of Tears. Drawn not from the Gospels but instead from Psalm 83, reinforced in the writings of Saints Jerome and Boniface, and in the mediaeval hymn Salve Regina (‘Hail Holy Queen’), it refers to the tribulations of worldly life left behind when the pious enter heaven. It’s sometimes known as the Valley of Tears.
Christ, bearing a full-sized cross, is in the distance, surrounded by an arch of light. He is beckoning a large crowd struggling up a steep and rough track leading towards him, and the rocky mountains behind. People in the crowd are of all ages, from infants to the aged, many with obvious physical disorders and ailments, all apparently suffering in their ascent up the Vale of Tears. I wonder whether Doré knew that his journey was also coming to a close.
Gustave Doré died in Paris on 23 January 1883 at the age of only 51. His illustrations live on today even though his paintings may have been sadly forgotten.


